Forms of precaution
Even when necessary or unavoidable, an accident, breach of contract, taking, or nuisance causes harm. The affected parties, however, can usually take steps to reduce the probability or magnitude of the harm. The parties to a tortious accident can take precautions to reduce the frequency or destructiveness of accidents. In contract, the promisor can take steps to avoid breach, and the promisee, by placing less reliance on the promise, can reduce the harm caused by the promisor's breach. Similarly, for governmental takings of private property, the condemnor can conserve on its need for private property, while property owners can reduce the harm they suffer by avoiding improvements whose value would be destroyed by the taking. Finally, the party responsible for a nuisance can abate; furthermore, the victim can reduce his exposure to harm by avoiding the nuisance.
Generalizing these behaviors, I extend the ordinary meaning of the word “precaution” and use it as a term of art … to refer to any action that reduces harm. Thus the term “precaution” includes, for example, prevention of breach and reduced reliance on promises, conservation of the public need for private property and limited improvement of private property exposed to the risk of a taking, and abatement and avoidance of nuisances. These examples are, of course, illustrative, not exhaustive.
The paradox of compensation
When each individual bears the full benefits and costs of his precaution, economists say that social value is internalized. When an individual bears part of the benefits or part of the costs of his precaution, economists say that some social value is externalized.